An improved system and method of providing bandwidth on demand for an end user and/or enterprise is disclosed. In one example, the method includes receiving, by a controller positioned in a network, a request for a high quality of service connection supporting any one of a plurality of one-way and two-way traffic types between an originating end-point and a terminating end-point. The controller determines whether the originating end-point is authorized to use the requested amount of bandwidth or the codec and whether the terminating end-point can be reached by the controller. The controller directs a portal that is positioned in the network and physically separate from the controller to allocate local port resources and negotiates to reserve far-end resources for the terminating end-point. The controller also provides routing instructions to the portal.
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13. A method for providing bandwidth on demand comprising:
receiving, by a controller positioned in a network, a request for a high quality of service connection between an originating end-point and a terminating end-point, wherein the request includes at least one of a requested amount of bandwidth and a video codec;
determining, by the controller, whether the originating end-point is authorized to use the requested amount of bandwidth or the video codec;
communicating, by the controller, with the originating and terminating end-points to ensure that the connection is free from video codec conversion;
directing, by the controller, one of a plurality of portals that is positioned in the network nearest to the originating end-point and physically separate from the controller to allocate local port resources of the portal for the connection; and
sending, by the controller to the portal, routing instructions for the connection, wherein traffic for the connection is routed by the portal based only on the routing instructions, and wherein the connection extending from the originating end-point to the terminating end-point is provided by a dedicated bearer path that includes a required route supported by the portal and dynamically provisioned by the controller, and wherein control paths for the connection are supported between each of the originating and terminating end-points and the controller and between the portal and the controller.
1. A method for providing bandwidth on demand comprising:
receiving, by a controller positioned in a network, a request for a high quality of service connection supporting any one of a plurality of one-way and two-way traffic types between an originating end-point and a terminating end-point, wherein the request comes from the originating end-point and includes at least one of a requested amount of bandwidth and a codec;
determining, by the controller, whether the originating end-point is authorized to use the requested amount of bandwidth or the codec and whether the terminating end-point can be reached by the controller;
directing, by the controller, a portal that is positioned in the network and physically separate from the controller to allocate local port resources of the portal for the connection;
negotiating, by the controller, to reserve far-end resources for the terminating end-point; and
providing, by the controller to the portal, routing instructions for traffic corresponding to the connection so that the traffic is directed by the portal based only on the routing instructions provided by the controller, wherein the portal does not perform any independent routing on the traffic, and wherein the connection extending from the originating end-point to the terminating end-point is provided by a dedicated bearer path that includes a required route supported by the portal and dynamically provisioned by the controller, and wherein control paths for the connection are supported only between each of the originating and terminating end-points and the controller and between the portal and the controller.
2. The method of
3. The method of
4. The method of
5. The method of
identifying, by the controller, billing information of a user corresponding to the request for a high quality of service connection; and
charging the user for the connection.
6. The method of
7. The method of
8. The method of
9. The method of
10. The method of
11. The method of
12. The method of
14. The method of
15. The method of
16. The method of
receiving, by the controller, a notification from the portal that traffic on the connection has exceeded an authorized limit; and
instructing the portal, by the controller, whether to terminate or allow the connection to continue.
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This application is a continuation application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/743,470, filed May 2, 2007, and entitled SYSTEM AND METHOD OF PROVIDING BANDWIDTH ON DEMAND, which application claims priority to and benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/796,660, filed May 2, 2006, and entitled IMPROVED SYSTEM AND METHOD OF PROVIDING BANDWIDTH ON DEMAND, both by inventor Kathy McEwen, the specifications of which are incorporated herein in their entireties.
The present invention generally relates to communications systems, and specifically to an improved system and method of providing guaranteed bandwidth on demand for an end user and/or enterprise.
Internet protocol (IP) networks were designed to handle any traffic, on any port, at any time. The goal was to utilize as many computing platforms as were available across a consortium of universities, governments and industries willing to share information (Reference IETF RFC 791 Internet Protocol Darpa Internet Program Protocol Specification, September 1981).
With these goals in mind, each of the computing platforms, or routers, were originally designed to be ad-hoc in nature. That is, they broadcast on each of their ports, the routing and cost to send a packet to itself. Each manufacturer of these routers defined their own concept of cost and its associated value. As a result of IP's original design goals, the path that a packet takes from origin to destination is completely unpredictable. In the example in
Now referring to
The services that may be delivered on broadband are many, ranging from real-time critical applications for communication purposes: video calling, multi-player gaming, telemedicine, television studio broadcast interviews, and high-definition news multicasting to name a few. These examples and a few others are listed in
Multi-Protocol Label Switching (MPLS) was developed to overcome some of the traffic engineering constraints of the IP protocols. MPLS allows operators to engineer a core network that aggregates traffic from IP, ATM, Frame Relay or even time-division voice domains, across a common packet core network. MPLS network operators can pre-define label switch paths, and ensure that virtual private network traffic is delivered on specific routes to achieve guaranteed quality of service levels (See IETF RFC 2702, Requirements for Traffic Engineering over MPLS).
MPLS standards have expanded to include point-to-multipoint multicasting (Reference IETF 4461: Signaling Requirements for Point-to-Multipoint Traffic-Engineered MPLS Label Switched Paths (LSPs)), and resource reservation protocols (Reference IETF RFC 3209, RSVP-TE: Extensions to RSVP for LSP Tunnels and RFC 4420) that dynamically utilize bandwidth across the core thus enabling less expensive transport for video broadcast traffic. The multicasting protocol enables construction of a distribution tree that replicates packets only at the branch points, rather than from the origination point. Now referring to
However, MPLS does not readily extend to the customer premises locations, as its focus has been on core packet transport aggregation, enabling controlled routing and quality of assurance through the packet transport. Also, MPLS was developed around the concept of delivering enterprise virtual private networking; thus much of the protocols and methods of packet quality assurance in MPLS require the utilization of a virtual Local Area Network (LAN).
Although IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) standard protocols evolved to try to address handling real-time multimedia streams across the IP packet domain, these standards have largely focused on enabling the streaming services as an overlay solution across existing IP network domains, without addressing any changes to the IP or MPLS routing architectures. Quality assurance requires managing the services end to end, from customer access point to access point. In addition, IMS standards were intended to be access agnostic, so the customer premises access point standards have been separately handled by various wireless (CDMA, GSM, UMTS, WiFi, WiMax, etc.) and wireline (Cable, DSL and Fiber, etc.) access standards.
Recently, focus for broadband applications has moved away from IMS to an evolution of these protocols within the 3GPP organization called TISPAN (Telecommunications & Internet Converged Services and Protocols for Advanced Networking) TISPAN intends to include methods for handling resource allocation and quality assurance, but again does not address the elements that sit within the customer premises to network access domain, leaving those up to the other standards bodies governing the various access types.
For the current broadband services deployments taking place, broadband network operators are utilizing mechanisms like the IEEE 802.1p bit marking to differentiate the service classes, and route traffic accordingly. Now referring to
Today, the only quality video transport with assurance that operators can use are dedicated line, virtual private networking services. Each new service that requires a high quality packet transport requires a separate virtual private network. This does not allow for dynamic bandwidth allocation and utilization—thus it does not economically scale across multiple services or across multiple users. An example of is illustrated in
Video transmission requires compression in order to effectively utilize the available broadband bandwidth across packet domains. Currently there are numerous different methods for encoding the video, some standardized and some are proprietary. Many existing video communication solutions today utilize proprietary mechanisms, which are incompatible across multi-vendor and access domains. Additionally, the video compression methods vary greatly in the bandwidth they require to transport the video in real-time—some solutions are as low as 64 kbps up to 300 Mbps. The bandwidth required can vary based on the codec type and the quality type compressed within the codec type. For example, MPEG-4 (Motion Picture Experts Group-4) defines methods to combine and encode video with sound and text, including the encoding of Standard Definition and High Definition.
Therefore, what is needed is an improved method and system of delivering guaranteed high bandwidth applications to an end user and/or enterprise end to end.
In one embodiment, the present disclosure provides a method for providing bandwidth on demand. The method comprises receiving, by a controller positioned in a network, a request for a high quality of service connection supporting any one of a plurality of one-way and two-way traffic types between an originating end-point and a terminating end-point, wherein the request comes from the originating end-point and includes at least one of a requested amount of bandwidth and a codec; determining, by the controller, whether the originating end-point is authorized to use the requested amount of bandwidth or the codec and whether the terminating end-point can be reached by the controller; directing, by the controller, a portal that is positioned in the network and physically separate from the controller to allocate local port resources of the portal for the connection; negotiating, by the controller, to reserve far-end resources for the terminating end-point; and providing, by the controller to the portal, routing instructions for traffic corresponding to the connection so that the traffic is directed by the portal based only on the routing instructions provided by the controller, wherein the portal does not perform any independent routing on the traffic, and wherein the connection extending from the originating end-point to the terminating end-point is provided by a dedicated bearer path that includes a required route supported by the portal and dynamically provisioned by the controller, and wherein control paths for the connection are supported only between each of the originating and terminating end-points and the controller and between the portal and the controller.
For a more complete understanding, reference is now made to the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying Drawings in which:
The present disclosure can be described by the embodiments given below. It is understood, however, that the embodiments below are not necessarily limitations to the present disclosure, but are used to describe a typical implementation of the invention.
The present invention provides an improved unique system and method of providing bandwidth on demand for an end user and/or enterprise. It is understood, however, that the following disclosure provides many different embodiments, or examples, for implementing different features of the invention. Specific examples of components, signals, messages, protocols, and arrangements are described below to simplify the present disclosure. These are, of course, merely examples and are not intended to limit the invention from that described in the claims. Well known elements are presented without detailed description in order not to obscure the present invention in unnecessary detail. For the most part, details unnecessary to obtain a complete understanding of the present invention have been omitted inasmuch as such details are within the skills of persons of ordinary skill in the relevant art. Details regarding control circuitry described herein are omitted, as such control circuits are within the skills of persons of ordinary skill in the relevant art.
The invention involves taking a distributed approach to handling bearer packets, with a physically separated controller and managed portal platform. The Controller handles signaling, routing, dynamic bandwidth admission control, codec (video and/or voice) negotiation, end-to-end quality assurance, session management, subscriber data, billing, provisioning and associated operational functions. The Portal handles the packet bearer transport with the admission control and routing instructions given by the separate physical Controller. The invention fits at the access and/or in the core network. Connections can be made between consumers, enterprises and/or content providers. For example, consumer to business, business to consumer, consumer to consumer, business to business, consumer to content provider, business to content provider, content provider to consumer, content provider to business, and content provider to content provider.
Now referring to
The Controller 712 accepts requests from an originating end-point to access the network with a high quality connection dynamically. The Controller 712 then negotiates across the network with the terminating end-point(s) to set up the connection, and ensures interoperability of service type (if used) and video codec type, and quality bandwidth reservation end-to-end.
Instead of trying to introduce a new class of service type for each additional high quality service and content provider at the access edge (See
Now referring to
The Controller 800 and Portal 802 are interconnected to each other and to content providers. The Controller 800 and Portal 802 also interconnect consumers, businesses and/or content providers. The control signaling connects using protocols directly to consumers, businesses, and/or content providers. The bearer between consumers, businesses, and/or content providers is connected through the Portal platforms 802.
In order to ensure quality, the Controller 800 inter-works with network protocols to dynamically provision a dedicated path, including required route and bandwidth, on demand through the network. The Controller 800 directs its associated Portal platform 802 to allocate local port resources, and then signals any destination party's Controller to reserve far-end resources.
The Controller 800 enables each bandwidth on demand user, originator and terminator, to negotiate with the network. The negotiation includes information elements necessary to ensure an end-to-end video connection free from video codec conversion in the core if possible. This avoids interoperability issues between user systems, and enables all application end-points to communicate freely.
Now referring to
The invention takes distributed switching control concepts from the low-bandwidth voice domain, and extends them to the variable-bandwidth packet routing domain. Moreover, the Portal 902 is under the direct management of the Controller 900. It only accepts traffic on its ports when authorized by the Controller 900 in real-time, and notifies the Controller 900 if a user's traffic terminates or exceeds allowance. The Portal 902 does not perform new routing on any packet, and only acts on the information provided by the controller 900. If any packets are received on any port at the Portal 902, which are arriving from a user that has not been authorized to use it, then those packets are discarded without prejudice. If an authorized user should exceed the limit authorized, the Controller 900 is informed, and an alarm is raised. The Controller 900 determines whether the user who is exceeding their limit should be disconnected, or allowed to continue, and instructs the Portal 902 according to a pre-set time limit. The Controller 900 contains a completely integrated bandwidth/portal admission control, routing and element management solution, which tracks, manages, and bills for all usage (Controller 900 plus its subordinate Portals 902). Furthermore, the maximum limit of Portals 902 to Controller 900 is determined based on the aggregate subscriber usage capacity across all Portals 900.
Now referring to
Now referring to
The previous description of the disclosed embodiments is provided to enable those skilled in the art to make or use the present invention. Various modifications to these embodiments will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art and generic principles defined herein may be applied to other embodiments without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention. Thus, the present invention is not intended to be limited to the embodiments shown herein but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and novel features disclosed herein.
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